David Bowie’s 1990 Sound & Vision Tour was billed as a greatest hits tour. Bowie planned the tour as a final farewell to retire his long-standing back catalogue of hit songs. This was to be the stage swansong for the old favourites, after which Bowie promised they would disappear from live performance. This stunning anthology contains 4 of those legendary performances.

DAVID BOWIE - FROM STATION TO STATION: JAPAN EDITION
THE LEGENDARY BROADCASTS
2ND EDITION 1000 NUMBERED COPIES ON WHITE VINYL

David Bowie's 1990 Sound & Vision Tour was billed as a greatest hits tour. Bowie planned the tour as a final farewell to retire his long-standing back catalogue of hit songs. This was to be the stage swansong for the old favourites after which Bowie promised they would disappear from live performance. This record features the highlights from the Sound & Vision performances.

CLASSIC LATE PERIOD BOWIE TELEVISION BROADCASTS David Bowie s output from the late 1980s and 1990s has been reassessed in all the right quarters since the great man s tragic passing in 2016, and has rightfully now been awarded plaudits often denied the releases and concerts from this era at the time they took place. This triple disc set goes some way to contributing to this effort by bringing together broadcast recordings form 1990 and 1992. The first of these was recorded at Bowie s gig in Buenos Aires in August of 90, while the second is from Tin Machine s legendary tour of Japan in the early part of 92, with the show presented here being the group s performance at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo on 17th February. The set is completed with a disc of television appearances recorded between 1975 and 1995, which features some of Bowie s best ever live TV spots.

3 x CD BOWIE BOX OF RARE COLLECTABLES Featuring a fine selection of Bowie collectables, this 3 x CD box set goes some way to completing the collections of Bowie fans everywhere. Including the full show David Bowie recorded at the London Marquee in 1973 (often referred to as the 1980 Floor Show ) which was broadcast on US television at the time, the set continues with the classic concert recorded at Mantra Studios in Chicago in 1977, when Bowie was special guest on Iggy Pop s tour that year. The set is completed with a CD of originals of songs that Bowie either covered during his career, or professed to be influenced by in interviews.

In January 1983, David Bowie invited Stevie Ray Vaughan to record guitar for six new tracks he d written for his upcoming album, Let s Dance. Vaughan s powerful and unique guitar work brought a fresh sound to Bowie s music, most famously on songs like China Girl and the record s title track. With the album a success, Bowie was keen for Vaughan to join his group for the subsequent Serious Moonlight Tour. However, with Vaughan reluctant to leave Double Trouble (who had just finished recording their debut album, Texas Flood), David s management offered to let the group open the show on select tour dates. However, just four days before the tour began, Bowie's team reneged, telling Vaughan s manager, Chesley Millikin,that the band would not be included and, furthermore, Vaughan wasn't allowed to talk about the group or its new record in interviews. With the offer pulled, Milikin understandably took Vaughan off the tour. And although both artists still achieved huge critical and commercial success during the 1980s, what they might have gone on to do together remains one of rock's great "What Ifs". No video footage of Bowie and Vaughan performing together is known to exist. However, rehearsals for the tour, which took place at the Las Colinas Soundstage in Dallas - Stevie Ray s hometown - on 26th April 1983, were not only recorded but broadcast on local radio too, thus allowing these legendary sessions to be heard again today.